McKenzie v. Hall

239 S.W. 154, 210 Mo. App. 1, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 174
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 3, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 239 S.W. 154 (McKenzie v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKenzie v. Hall, 239 S.W. 154, 210 Mo. App. 1, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 174 (Mo. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

*3 BLAND, J.

This suit is brought in two counts; the first is to recover on a promissory note alleged to have been executed by defendant in favor of plaintiff. This note reads as follows:

“Tarkio, Missouri, Nov. 4, 1912.
$10,000.
“On demand--days after date, we promise to pay to the order of Peter McKenzie, ten thousand dollars, for value received, with interest from date at the rate of five per cent per annum, payable annually, and if the interest be not paid annually, the same shall become as principal and bear the same rate, of interest. Each of the makers hereof and the endorsers hereon, waived, demand, notice and protest on this note. M. H. Hall, Y. M. Hall, M. Harold Hall, Jr.”

The second count alleges that plaintiff loaned the defendant $10,000' on the 9th day of December, 1912, to be paid on demand and bearing five per cent interest per annum. It admits certain payments and prays judgment for the balance due. The answer denies generally the allegations of the first count of the petition and alleges that the note mentioned was not delivered or intended to be delivered. The answer to the second count of the petition consists of a general denial and alleges that there is a balance due defendant and prays judgment for the same. The reply pleads an account stated on December 9, 1912, and that the balance due plaintiff was agreed upon and pleads the statute of limitations as to any item of the account that accrued prior to. December 9, 1912. The case was referred and upon hearing the evidence the referee found an account stated on December 9, 1912, and, after allowing certain credits arising after that date, found that defendant was indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $4603, and recommended that the court enter judgment for that sum with interest from July 16, 1920. Upon the filing of the report of the referee defendant filed his exceptions which were overruled, and the report was approved by the court and judgment entered *4 for plaintiff in accordance with the recommendations of the referee.

The facts show that in 1901 the parties hereto had lived for many years in Atchison county, Missouri, and had become close friends. At that time plaintiff owned a large farm and much personal property in said county but had become financially embarrassed. He went to Canada to seek financial assistance from his brothers and borrowed from them $23,500. Prom that time plaintiff spent most of his time in the State of Idaho and in Canada, leaving’ his business affairs in the hands of defendant at Tarkio, Atchison County, Missouri. Practically the entire charge of plaintiff’s property was left to defendant who handled it as though it were his own. The money realized from plaintiff’s property was placed in the bank at Tarkio in plaintiff’s name but was checked out by defendant’s signing plaintiff’s name to the checks. Defendant from time to time would borrow money from this account for his own use, presumably without plaintiff’s knowledge, and deposit demand notes in its place. Defendant handled plaintiff’s property and money with almost unlimited authority as general and confidential agent, remitting sums to plaintiff from time to time. -No account was ever demanded although a great amount of business was transacted for about eleven years, or until 1912. The only property of plaintiff undisposed of in 1912 was some small real estate in Tarkio, which had been sold but the money not collected, jvhen plaintiff came from Canada to Tarkio for the purpose of making settlement. Plaintiff stayed at defendant’s house eight or nine days and either on November 4th or December 9, 1912 (the true date will be discussed hereinafter), plaintiff claims he made a settlement with defendant. Prior to November 4th a mortgage belonging to plaintiff on Idaho property had been paid off and the money received by defendant and deposited in a bank at St. Joseph, the exact amount being unknown to the parties on that date.

*5 We think the evidence fairly disclosed that on November 4th the matter of settlement was first taken np. Plaintiff testified that on that day defendant examined his books and found that he owed plaintiff $10,000 of $11,000. We conclude from the evidence that the exact amount was not known at that time on account of the uncertainty as to the amount of money at St. Joseph. Plaintiff testified that defendant then executed the $10,-000 note above set out and delivered it to plaintiff who handed it back to defendant to be placed in the bank for safe keeping. Defendant gives a somewhat different version of the transaction. He testified that plaintiff said to the effect “Well, how do we stand?” That defendant casually looked over the account without a careful examination of it and remarked, about the Idaho mortgage money. Plaintiff said that defendant owed him over $10,000. Defendant testified that he (defendant) then said, “It looked like he (plaintiff) had $11,000 and something.” He told plaintiff that he would call up St. Joseph and find out the exact amount of the mortgage money. This proved to be $9649.68.

Defendant admits that he signed his name and the name of his two sons to the note at this conversation on November 7th and that he thought that he owed plaintiff at that time that much money but afterwards upon a careful examination of his books he discovered that he owed plaintiff an amount between $5000 and $6000. Defendant never communicated to plaintiff this information and did not make and such claim until after suit was filed, although the money was often demanded of him by plaintiff. Defendant always put plaintiff off when written to for the money but made partial payments from time to time. Defendant denies that he delivered the note to plaintiff but admits that he read it over to plaintiff who was at the time an aged man and totally blind. Defendant testified that he prepared the note merely as a memorandum for his own convenience and that it was not intended to be a binding obligation. But we think *6 the evidence shows almost conclusively that it was the intention of the parties on November 4th that there be a settlement of the account subject to correction when the exact amount of the Idaho mortgage was obtained.

On December 9th plaintiff requested that defendant execute the following note by writing these words in plaintiff’s memorandum book — “Tarldo, Missouri, Dec. 9, 1912. $700. On demand after date, I promise to pay to Peter McKenzie Seven Hundred Dollars ($700). M. H. Hall.” This note was afterwards paid in full by defendant. On the same day plaintiff asked defendant to make an entry in the former’s memorandum book. In reference to this entry plaintiff testified — “I got him to make that entry in the book for the purpose if anything should happen to me that they would realize and know that there was a note for $10,000 in his possession and I got him to make that entry in that account to show for that note.” Defendant then wrote in plaintiff’s book the following—

“Tarkio, Missouri, December 9. To whom it may concern. This is to say that N. H. Hall has an open account with Peter McKenzie which is a matter of open record of credits and debits which will explain itself.”

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Bluebook (online)
239 S.W. 154, 210 Mo. App. 1, 1922 Mo. App. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckenzie-v-hall-moctapp-1922.